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THE PLATTSBUBGH SENTINEL. When You Consider that they core Biliousness and Sick Headache j stir your liver to healthy activity and purify your blood so that new vigor, new life, are yours, you will realize the importance to you of DR. HERRICK'S SUGAR-COATED PILLS Besides,—worth considering, too—they do their work safely, thoroughly, at little cost. They have been doing this for the past sixty-five years. I'ITNI nlnlioii I'opma (tie ii-ll.li I it IMatts'lm In every town and village may be had, the Mica Axle Grease that makes your horses glad. Sff'AM OEMS. requenf.lv Wo n •icr-lpwi Heir loo (From T'ld Bin HI eenmonies a.wing room fa Iwn <-hara<-trrl iisplay of daz: •>^ise imany t o tio-n of t'he.se 1 In Place of und imany notions have zed by a re- zling jewels know that a are artificial PARKHUSST & TAYLOR. to A. M. Platt & Co., GENERAL INSURANCE Riley & Con\vay\s New Block, Clinton St PLATTSBURGH, N. Y. MAUAZINL NOTES. MoCarte iifis in hi 1'Util Mu.c'h of four en re lias i din ill in f COl st n .ska': o-r+h enta cole Oif beer I'ing IDS, rn-pe.l irBsl s lint lias iiy V, ib i-ti e •or a fo most ariisli:- he illustrat- .ratopa as a :'he cause of c past year. ne of the I at ion there ig interest. with hunger lor to prove- living vol- urwi that a \Thr lent of Crtptaii ie« H. Kidder, an nuthoritv. ha-'- ,-fi-ed n new s.prrvies of •lx-ir. anrl -vhat. he hap fomml out ahoul tlil*- 1M' Alaska •hunting. Big game ••s are nnl the; only class r\- ited. for shotgun men cannot fall n-g. bv Edwin Sandys. y hunifin <-m> th\ \Little Poonle Why Shiver? Invest $10.00 in a 48 inch Overcoat or if you pre fer something better we have the more expensive kind at $12.00, $15.00 and $18,00 also the cheaper kind at $6.00 and $7.50 All Lengths, All Colors, All Styles ALL VALUES GUARANTEED Our Vermont Grey Reefer at $5 Is the Workman's Friend EARLY OHRi.STMAS SHOITiEIlri WILL Fl.NM) HERE NECKWEAR, M'UiFr;Ll3RS, j GLOVES, SHIRTS, HA 1' IIROBKH AND HOUSE OOATfc. 1 A. F. BRANDO 9 CLINTON STREET The People's Clothiei burnisher and Hatter uary, inclu enry W. U niorc, J. W. had s ding an i lid y oer said a dealer in precious there i« nowadays no pamtlcu- n why a peeress should haz- loss of p,rireiess famiily helr- ' wearing her jewelry out or nd, as a matter of fact, feince The Eminent Kidney and Bladder Specialist. sati< rabbe whi<-h t th e Sii-Hio ie settled down in despair to the long'thefce most venomous snakes M*- light of agony before him. | Beams possessed a remedy that w£ It is said- that the minds of drown- ian antidote for the bites but It te ng .men become exceedingly clear be- more than proibaWe tlhat MB sekvet' |ore death ensues and that the pano- died with him. He <wm a frequent rania of their lives passes before them, I sight, iin olden times, with a box con- with each nliggardly deed standing out taining several of the rattles whirih In bold relief Certain it was that as he would show for a dime to the «£ - fhe Colonel knelt 'before the safe in ious. Frequent were the oeSLimS tthe silence and darkness of the great I whom travelers would halt in front or re his wnaginatlion bodied forth his door and tehout, \Got any snakes' S Se O fac O e m w^ n deSon6 I TS^ wS ^ ^ , ma n ^ it h ^ e *><>x Would a board bill already two weeks overdue ' h. yes, the \spectral farm of his mild red landlady stood before him. But hat were those uneartihly shapes that •'Su •ated in Paris a few years aL _ _,_. expense of the Dtichttss of Tie Discoverer of Swamp-Root at Work im land, very few of them do. The Hi8 Laboratory. gem looks just as well as fne There is a disease prevailing in this id costs infinitely less. Eighteen country most dangerous because so decep- •i ago thp 'reconstructed' 'ruby, tive. Many sudden deaths are caused by as got to be called, was placed it—heart disease, pneumonia, heart failure markrt. Properly speaking, this or apoplexy are often the result of kidney an imitation gem, although In a disease. If kidney trouble is allowed to ad- vance the kidney-poisoned blood will attack the vital organs, or the kidneys themselves break down and waste away cell by cell. Then the richness of the blood—the albumen —leaks out and the sufferer has Bright's Disease, the worst form of kidney trouble. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root the new dis- covery is the true specific for kidney, bladder and urinary troubles. It has cured thousands •f apparently hopeless cases, after all other use it IK artificial—that js to' say a product of the chemist's laoora- i-y. It is ma.de by fusing small rulblevs fi-acments of rabies in an elertrie rnaee. and mol.'ding the resultant' umerable hosts to whom he (had promised cigars or wine suppers—no be knew theim, the men who held that I 0 l T 's for those social poker r [ort j he agony of his Polonel was ready to -hoer desperation when iound of footsteps. He strained ears a .t the dly be dist:n- iort froim one •oduct of the •uby which is (the natural pro< mine. It has all the Hit physical properties of the rt is as hard, has the sai Gravity, and ta as genuine in cif)lor. in fact, a reconstructed is diHt.iim-iiiahFd not so -much b: presence of defects as by the absence of f'riwf-. it >s apt to be too perfett. \T.'hf .same with emeralds. Artificial emoraMs are put on the market nowa- days that are as. •brillia.iit. a.s flawless •ichly colou-ed ay the real stoii' ppy pees cases, after all other efforts have failed. At druggists in fifty-cent . «..••-», and dollar sizes. A sample bottle \ent free thing. . by mail, also a book telling about Swamp- specific j Root and its wonderful cures. Address Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y. and mention this paper. CAITWHT I\ A H.4FR HO are. hoiwever. not made by fus- he h ' a(1 mmall gfTinine go«ms. as are the , ov;ne( ' n iifaclured outright a! until :lt. test—that ed by n pe They cabled him colonel and Iv vays responded graciously L o th le. 'No one ecu id say /positively that not co.niima.nded a regiment C'groes in the South, rum fo: office or stumped the State for wom- an suffrage. S|o the title wais disputed. There was a certain imper- ious something about his demeanor which, coupled with a luxuriant crop :>f bristling Mack whiskers, m.ade him particularly formidaible. Fur- more, it had fljeen giathered from ^tii i nUiT GIVE US YOUR Job Printing Our office is equipped with'firstclass appliances and our prices are always reasonable DAILY PRESS JOB PRINTING OFFICE Getting Good Lumbei Doors, Sash, Blinds* INSIDE FINISH, LATH, SHINGLES, ETC. PLATTSBURGH, NEW YORK i-(>.'f(ipi\.ing in flattei foil- foil) yeans, I 1 Re? •McKibJb pickinig up and , electric light a requested by the it to present you if the Hove they iMcKibibln! 1 ' joimipletely s'ur- you ueh .feeling, payi .« officers and ent. onplutised, responded with L tribute to of his old regi- WhutK In a \UIIM- v /orythirvg ite in the name when it os to Witch Hazel Salve. E. C. iDe- Witt & Co. of Chicago, dLscovered T\e years ago haw ito make a salve im Witch Hazel tJtvat Is a spewiflc • Piles. For Blind, bleeding, itching (1 protruding Piles, eczema, cu>ts, rns, brutees and ail skin d-i; DoWitt'.s salve has no equal. Thin I, n rise to numerous worthless iterfeits. Abk for DeWitt's—th I). K. Oil]espi< ito Gil Plattsburg; Ausa'ble Forks, \ville. H. St«t«- (anal ririin'N. The figures representing the u if the State camills for the last • f navigation clearly show that Superintended of Public-Works nler extending tiie season by a vas appreciated by the boanne in Great Br • other bits mcl fiction e recent in- ,T. Parmly of Amcr'cq, e.ric-an Wn- r F . Puffv. iter. tells of ?idv ntnrp. than value. Ba ptey Jlntt<T». meeting of the Bankrupt held in the gniand jury roo of the Court House alt Malone, Vrida •. 12, the following oases were di wosed of: In the ease of iRoibert Schroeder. Dufane, no assets were disclosed ai no trustee was appointed. In the oaise of Hairy Cohen, of Sa anac. Lake, held 'before 'Hon. H. Kel'lagg, as special miaslt no p;istf< by the- by, left se i •Mistihil^ the basis of all \ t]v l.italion diamonds. It allj th o conversations with which he re- ni one. man. a Parisian Saled a few of his intimaite friend: cowts from £3 to ,£G an I a t times that he had made a.n ex rding to the quantity order- jhaustive study of political conditions, and that he had a relady-mad' tion for every problem of public mo- ment. 'His tales of adventure indi- cated that he had traveled in nearly ry comntry known to civilization, had purstied to his lair the Ben- gal tiger and the fierce mountain • th< Tw D oned doub- ts are made /entering In rlingly thin stone are co men ted core. Tliis method is r inianunu'turiug art- some of the cleverest work is A really first-class artincal pearl w made equal in slieenj, color • ize no one actually the natural ox of the oyster. Practically it. is *4ble to tell tlhem apart. Even of t:h€ R'hich is oyster, the responsible for the pe lemically reproduced. I : also is a secret, and t a guinea a pint, put up ii irl, has s com- stir-ally pealed battles. This to coat t'he artiificiail gems. \Imitation pearls, I may tell you are not blown, as they were a few years back, but are dropped in a tower like shot. By this means it is possible to turn t'heim out perfectly round, of al- most any requisite slize; and, most im- iportant point of all, minus the small \nub which marked as artificial the old- fashioned blown pearl. 'Do I think it wiill ever be possible i 'ba: le in favor of an adividication t o furn Oll t a 'reconstructed' diamond7 1 VAT . T ,1« T v-i Irn s\\- \± \ rt \K r\A ft r* JLn « _ In the case of James A. Tobey. of Malone, assets weire disclosed a.nd the referee appointe<l Harry M. Ghaimiber- lain as trustee, whose bond was fixed at $2,\)<><>. Thomas Adams, Samiuel Flanagan and iWlllisim Creek were ap- pointed appraisers. The sitocik com- prising the assets has been in charge of Deputy _V. S. Marshal Roby for some time and wi'lil be immediately turned over to the trustee. In the case of Benjamin Buckless, of (.'hatelauigaiy, no assets were diisclosed, and no tmiKiee was appointed. T do. In Fact it is being don.- but the process is an expensive the stones when finished al- though t)he not the possess tire hardness, have or the .brilliancy of th\ Rut the thing is in the air k It bi g speak. Improvements are h i l WORK BEJNG PUSHED. he Dismantling Of the Ororwn Point Furnace Well Advanced. Harry Mullen, fonnian machinist, John Retieaner, Charles Tinn and Willlp )U nd : de; u-ility to shippers and boat.mim in ieir efforts -to relieve the coal fcwri- le. The tota.l tonnage for the clos- ig week w»a* 211,9!)8 tons,'as against lojlo.'j Ions for : tbe corresiponding •eek last year, an inorease of 92.2S.> tons. This inni'ease was langelv oi J Mght oth east ist. ilight i Jio fl? 114,837 tons, ;is 78.915 tons last year; wu / wpst, 84,243 tons, as against ons last year. There was a icrease iij through freigiht west, res being D.lllfl tons, as against us last .year, while there IW,I;J g off in tlirougii freight east, wiigh freight being omly 7,752 ot' i Broiwn froim T. P. Morrli Works, Philadelphia\. Pa., are in Crown Point doing the preparation work necessary to the shipping of tihe big Morris engine to Sheffield, Ala- They pypiect to 'have it ready for trans portetion .by the flrftt of the New Year. It is thought that the narrow igauge locomotive owned by the old furnace big Morris engine to Sheffield, Ala. bp.ma. Geoi-ge Harris of Port Henry, has the contract to- loald the ore, maa-ibls and limestone, which was sold by made daily. And there i son why. in the near future, an artifi- ciial Koh-i-ndor slhould not be tairneJ out which shall he in every way equal to the famous Indian jewel.' If you feel ill and need a pill Why not purchase the best? DeWitt's Early Risers Are little surprlsers. Take one—rjhey do the rest W. H. Howell, Houston, Tex., writes —T have used Little Early Riser Pills in my family for constipation, sick headache, etc. To their use I am in- debted for the health of my family. n. K. Gilbert Plattsiburg; H. E. Gillespie, A usable Forks, W. M S'tone Keeseville. Nonh n Steel and Wire company mpany oif Port Henry, and has already be-grun opera- ti tions. It is rumored that the action of the American Steel and Ware company^ in tearing doiwn the furnace property was due. to a certain cytemt, to tlie net:ion of the assessors of the town of Crown Point, who had the company assessed for tiwo-thirds of valn-itio-i own. When t.hp, treasurer of WHITTLING POSTAL CARDS. A Musical Novelty in Trans- At Iantii •Mail Bags The whistlting postal card, which made its appearance *3ame years ago in the foreign .mail department of the general postoffi.ee, waB muah in evi Sunday m.oa-Tiing when the that pani were ame over in the Cunarder Cam- was opened In New York. There hundreds of the whistling vari • of food last year: nt mid r -eply ty in tihe mail, and for probably hour the uninitiated postail clerk! were busy trying to find canary birds jay birds and in several ca^es cryinj babies, that the sounds that filled th room ed them to believe had crossed the Atlantic in mail ba,gs. The cards come from Germany and are about the saime size as the regula- tion American card. Where the imr-- Alcl-en. W3= nt saue is to 'he iwrititeu there are the '. we are iinform-- pictures of tiwo birds, one bird flying •ty, the assessors ! to tlhe east and the other to the west, influence to have : Between the birds the whistle, which ed from taxation I is a very small 'affair, is ingeniously , providing th? j inverted and emits its sound when the operations. Mr. card 'is grasped, the- efff.-cit that if Just how the co-lonel came to b( holding down his present position o; head janitor in a lar/ge department house no one seemed to 'know, for no one had had the temerity to asfe. Such, ho r er, wias the case, for al- most any time duiring the could be seen silting in the 'large arm- chair at the head janitors desk, af- \ectionaitely stroking his bristlin/ fhiskers. He was always the first man to lairrive at the store and the last one ito leave. Always, before closing for the ni'ght, he would maike a round of the building to see that everything was in order. One even- ng as he was making his usual tou: of inspection he ndticed that the door >f the safe in the helad Ibookikeepeir s office had \been left ajart \That's a careless felljow,\ said the Colonel t o himself as he knelt ihefore the safe and clewed the door wiith bang. 'I'll report him in the morn- ing.' 1 A smile of self-satisfaction over his face as he thought of the dils- confiture of tihe bookkeeper who bad never treated him with any great-de- gree of confeideratiion. TH fix him, dhiuokled the Ctolonel to himself. With that he tlurned the knob of the safe door and heard the bolt click into place. Attempting to rise he was hor- rified to find that a portion oif his beau- tiful beard had been locked to, the safe! With nervous fingers he-fum- bled with the dial of .the combination, then rememlbered thait he bad never 'earnd it. Merciful heavens! Could it be that he was a prisoner, that he would have to remain in that kneeling posture all night long only to be released in the morning amid a crowd of Jeering clerks. The tlho/ttight almost paralyzed him. With a great effort! he threw back his head in a wild endeawor to lease bis whiskem from the iron grip of the safe. The hot blood rushed to his <fa.ee and big 1 tears, welled into his eyes and ran dawn the fcolloiwte of his cheeks. A sickening groan escaped him as he felt his benuimibed chin with Ms trembling hand only to find 1 that the whiskers were fetill there. For a mo- ment he remained tmtotionless in an endeavor to collect his thougttits and calm his heart whlich was beating wildlv somewhere near the top of hte chest. Then, s him—he with it sever the whiskers that held him captive. He ran his hand quick- ly into one pocket, then anoth then he rememlbered that he had lefi ididenly, a thought struck i'ould draw his knife and s g s e! on his desk ar Pened a pencil. t where he had P p Witt h his las t vesti e e o f ho P 6 flotWT1 XORWA\'» W1XTEK FUST Tt is during the Norweiglian winter that tihe most characteristic sports ia :ountry bold sway. Wihen the are frozen after the snow has torture the 5 ta ! len ' lhe water * covered 'with tlbe •ry out from ' bri Sht. shinning ice, and, like the gulls, he heard the during the summer the Norwegian listened with I'oys now glide aibout on their skates they stopped for a where in July and 'August, tlhey had clcor. then came crossed in sailingnboate. But \wfhea hurriedly on to the HJI ner. Could it 1 led to blow th. thought almost froze his blood, next moment a match '.vas struck gas wa>3 lighted. ied the head ibookkeep- p er, las he sprang quickly back and wlvere he was j the snow covers mountalin valley, fiord ' rglar many feet deep, snow-shoeinig, or ' The | ski-tabning, as it is called in Norway The, btcorni-o universal, not merely as a sport, but also as a necessary way of traveling. The skees are and drew the revo'lver which he al-wj of ash. It is } made of wood, mostly uuitaible wood ed. don't shoot.\ as he cringed ememt to free him- ulored the doilonel, tmgged in his exeit self. \Oh. it's you, eh, that's tampeiiing vitb the safe?\ cried the 'bookkeeper, s the set expression of his .face re- laxed into 'a ©mile. •'A i ute more and I'd have blow- the purpose, but they can also be ade out of pine, of birch or of al im-, most any wood in which the grain runs straight, and which ia not too knotted. But woods like aiah, wMcfh is both hard and flexible, are adimiirably adapted for skee-making. . The slrees are some ten feet long and about ifour inchs broad, and taper up in front in a greaceful curve. A very slight id ed your brains out. I just hap/pened to thinik of some papers I wanted to -get and dropped in here. What does mean, anyway? Tell me quickly or I'll call the police, and—\ \It means,\ said the colonel, \that ve glot my whiskefls caught in the safe, and I can't gelt loose.\ After prodding the colonel wit'i jokes and jibes for almost an hour the bookkeeper consented (to unlock the safe and li/berate. the prisoner, n they had rieaehed the sitreet th y slight groove about half an inch wide runs all along the middJle of the skee from front to back, giving a tendency to keep Ht steady in one direction, and to prevent it, to feoime extent, from slid- ing to one side. About an inch 'back of the middle of the skee, a loop is made out of twisted williotw or, in re- cent years frequently out of leather- . covered bamboo forming a flnrn but flexible support for the toot about two indhes back of tihe toe. Another lobp> of leather-covered bamboo runs ifrom the ibase of the loop for the toes and d th hl L^rcllUllCU Lilt: & l LIC*2l LIlc? , . - . , * v ——« colonel drew a long breath, then in ^^L^J? 6 ^!:,^. 1111 . 6 . ^?_« rB » n aJbstraoted way he slapped the bookkeeper on 'the shoulder, and said as he laffetetionately ismioofchjed out. the kinks of his miuch prized beard: Ht's on me; let's itake something.\ BOON FOR 0LEOTRIOIANS. A Safety Dress. Invented by Profes- sor Artemiei'f. Experiments have been made with Prote&sor Artemieff's safety dre£« in the high tension laboratory of Messrs. Siemens & Hiaiska. This dress, says a winter in Engineering, is construcrued entirely of fine 'but thickly woven wire gauze. It completely incloses the wear- er, inclusive oif hands, feet ami head. Its total weight is 3. 3 pounds its re- istanee from hand to hand .017 ohms and its capacity varies from. .0002 up to .00025 microfarads, according as the wearer is far away or near to a wall. The cooling surface is. so great thot a current of 200 amperes can pass through the dress for some seconds from hand to hand 1 without perceptible heating effect. Standing uninsulated on the ground and clad with this dress,- 1 Professor Ar- temieff drew sparks from the second- ary terminalis of a transformer iwhich s giving a tietnsion of 75,000 volts, the period being fifty cycles per se- cond. He next seized th© main, and later on, tihe potential being ra&sed to 150,000 volts, he drew sparks from both tenminals and handled the latter. The machine Supplying this transfor- mer was of 170 kilowatt capacity. In concluding the experiments the inventor short circuited this generator by clutching hold of tihe teiimiinals, the potential difference between the two being 1,000 volte, and the current poss- ed 200 amperes. The circuit was brok- en by simply letting go of one elec- trode. Throughout these experiments Professor Artemieff declared' he felt not the slightest sensation of any our- ren-t through has ibody. rnner then finishes the fastening by buckling a strap over his instep. Thiis peculiar arrangement of \oKrps and straps allows tfhe runner to move heel in a vertical direction so far that he conl'd, although -with effort, it his knee down ot the «kee -In front of him, while his toes stflll re- main in the loop; but In a horizon- tal direction the foot is arrested; the skee must follow every small move- ment of the floot to the right or left. —St. Nicholas. Kodol Oyspepula Cure Digests all classes of food, tones ana strengthens the fetomach and digestive organs. Cures Dyspepsia, Indigestion,» Stomach Troubles, and makes rich rea blooa, health anti strength. Kodol re- builds wewnout tissues, purifies, strengthens and sweetens itfoe stomach Gov. G. W. Atkinson, of W. Va., says I have used a number of bottles of Kodol and have Sound it to be a very effective and indeed, a powerful reme- dy for stomach ailments. I recommend it to my friends. D. K. Gilbert Plattdburig; H. E. Gillespie, Ausabie Forka, W. M. Stone Keeseville. FAMOUS CHAftAiCT'ER GONE. William Beams, the Rattlefcns Hunter, Dead The last and, possibly, tihe inmost famous of the rattlesnake huntetrs or the section of a quarter of a cemfcury ago, William 'Beams is dead, at hte home at the Hemlocks in advanced years. The deceased for years made quite a 'business of hunting rattUesnakes upon the hill back of hte late home which, in forlmer days, abounded wltn the dread reptiles and where tihey have at, frequent intervals (been found until with'in the (past few yeara The snakes were hunted for their skins and the oil which their bodiete yielded. They were believed by imaay to possess exceptional mediieinal value and the oil still; brings a large price in many quarters. It i s believed to have ex- ceptional curative poiwers in rheuma- tism and similar aliments. Like many others of the hunters of , ta p ombines the two sides of this loop under the foot. The skee-runner then fi O'CONNBLL'S COOLNESS. A Story of the Ms& Liberator and a Falling Floor. Daniel O'Connell wafe once address- ing an enormous meeting in Kings- town, and the crowd <was so large that fear was felt for tihe safety of the building. As be was about to speak a gentleman ascended the plat- form and said trerolbling with, fear; 'Liberator, tihe floor is giving .way! The beams are ortaeking, and we shaH aill fall tihroulgh in a faw minutes.\ It is not given to noany jjaem to lira through such moments as CCcomell lived through as he rose to address the meeting mar to preserve suchm&gm ficent courage in the face of great peril. Warning the •man to keep quiet, the liberator said, \1 find this room too small to contain the nuaaber who desire to came in, Bo we must there- fore leave &t and hold tihe 'meeting outside.\ A few rose to leave, but the hall was still packed, and thiea O'Con- I l tell p, nell said: \Then I < tell you ldd h truth. You iare Irishimen anl therefore brave men. The floor is giving way, and we mufet leave this room at oniee. If th^ere is a panic and a ruah to the dbor, we shall all ibe precipitated dnto the rotoro below, but if you obey my orders we slhiali be safe. Let the dozen men nearest the door go Quietly out, then tihe next dozen, and so on until all have gone. I shall be the. last to leave.' The IrMnmien toldtowed the advice, the hall iwals> quickly cleared, and * O'Connell \walked across the floor the broken beaims gave •way.— Oxford Chronicle. changes lat a hoai RELIGION OF THIS -BLANKET. ^ j Haw the Navajo' Sq^iaw Prays as She i Spins and Weavt'3 i It is a religion to make a Navajo [ blanket. Through the kinky, bristling Restle of tHie warp are woven the hopes ( Weak yp 1 !'rat ions of an immortal soul. I Xo >.u colors are expresed theJ h d j THESE ARE THE REASONS WHY DR. A. W. CHASE'S NERVE PILLS LEAD THE WORLD Founded on common sense—Years of study and experience—Devoid of all suibstance injurious—Purely vege- table in composition—Contain no opiates or narcotics—Easy and pleasant in action—Thorough in effect, certain in results—Safe in all ages, at all times—And in all conditions recommended—The product of a master mind— The life work of the famous author of DR. CHASE'S RECIPE BOOK. )i;iinl. 11. r . Wi'. nigh Ourt Madison wrlu One Minute Cuug-h nt good health and It cures Coughs, ronrhlCs. Pnoumon- and Lung troubles. 5?h Cure cuts the in Ham ma tion. heals I'lattsburg; H. E. s, languid, and weary, s—no energy, no amibition. l the time. I woo! card the dista f passionate hearts, the sand- j T'hrobbing, palpitating 1: they have faced, cloudbursts; sleepless nights. hich iheir backs have bent. | S-udd'en startings. ing sunshine that, has dried Morning languor. )nl; all the advei'ie and the rtunea that have ibefallen are into- the intricate desllgns. a.!\v prays as she pushes the she prays an sh rt. SYMPTOMS:- 'Brain fag Inability to work or think. Exhaustion on exertion. Flagging appetite. Slow digestion. Food heavy. Easily excited, nervous. Pli i Th e rail re id i west of Philaideli^iia co-Hapse tfirKKin. burying fifty men. A number of injured h; taken out and removed to t talK. The ru.ins caught fire burning fiercely. pra hand or rolls it on prays as she arranges pray** as she lustily .he woof strands with A blanket is all a p-r . a biiiman r 'bright with the UT1CA. N. Y. NEIJLIE MUlRHHY, OF N'O. 13 tWl'ON YORK, sa STRIDE T, UTUCA, ys:— \I had NEW feel- ing tired and run down for 'same time and generally nervous. I got a box of Dr. A. W. Chase's iNerve Pills ]... Y in...-, i.f canary yellow, dark with, tihe olive green of pain. One is drawn I anu to it because one's heart te moved by its ineffable, intangible huinianna-s. One is strangely moved to both laugh- ter and tears by its exquistely variant color?, each expressing an emotion by its warmth of .blended fibers, each throibiblng to a note of trhimph or of woe.—Southern Workman. id them an excellent remedy. They 'built me up and helped rue in every way. I also rested better after ANERVETONICNEVER Equ4LED Ttns SHAPED BOX-NO OTHER Strength rails. Trembling hands and limbs. Loss of flesh. Loss of muscular power. Settled mielandholia. Irritable, despondent. Complete collapse. GDENS FALLS. N. Y. 'MRS. E. G. IWEST, OF ND. 9 JjOiOUST STREET, GLENS FAOLiLS, NEW YORK, says:— I felt I need- ed a nerve tonis, as I seetoed to lack energy and life as well as strength. I got a ibox of Dr. A. W. Chase's Nerve Pill's, and am able to say tihey were just what I needed. They gave me strength, vigor and energy; in fact, the life-like feeling I lacked came'back. I feel I can conscientiously recommend theto to others.\ Beware of imitations.—Signature and portrait of Dr. A. W. Chase on eacfh box of the genuine. For sale by jailers, 60c a 'box, or Dr. A. W. Chase Medicine Co., 257 Washington Street, Buffalo. N. Y.